If you have one clean shirt and one clean pair of pants, then you have a super easy decision when getting ready in the morning. But what if you just did laundry and you actually have three clean shirts and four clean pairs of pants? How many different possible outfits could you come up with then? Well, this is actually the exact sort of thing that you'll be asked to do. Find the number of total possible outcomes when faced with multiple options for multiple different things.
Now this might sound like it could be overwhelming or time-consuming having to come up with all these outcomes, but here I'm going to show you that it's actually super simple and we're not just going to have to individually count each of these options. We can come up with it much easier. So let's go ahead and just jump right in here. Now with our three shirts and four pairs of pants, if I take that first color shirt and pair it with all four different colors of my pants and then I do the same thing for my second shirt and for my third shirt, if I count all of these up, I see that I have 12 total possible outfits that I could make on that day. But I can actually come to this conclusion much easier using the fundamental counting principle.
The fundamental counting principle tells us that if there are
So looking at that first thing, my first choice to make is of those four appetizers. So I have four possible choices there. Then for my second thing, I have six entrees to choose from, so I have six possible choices there. Now if I multiply those two together, together, four times six, I get my number of total possible choices of a meal with an appetizer and an entree, and we're done here. Now let's look at our second example.
Here, we're asked to find how many possible outcomes are there if we flip a coin and then roll a six-sided die. Well, something that you might notice here is that we're not really making a choice. If I flip a coin, there are two things that could happen. I could get heads or tails, but I'm not really choosing here. And that's okay because the fundamental counting principle also applies to outcomes of events.
So if there are
So the first choice I have to make is what shirt I'm going to wear out of these four, so I know that I have four possible choices there. Then for my second thing, I have five pairs of pants, so I want to multiply four times five. But since I have a third thing here, what exactly do I need to do? Well, the fundamental counting principle doesn't just apply to two events. It can also apply to any number of events.
So if I have more than two things that I'm choosing from, I'm just going to continue to multiply by the number of options of each thing and that will give us our total. So here since I have three pairs of shoes, I'm going to continue to multiply and I'm going to multiply by that three and I get four times five times three, which gives me 60, my number of total possible options of those three things together. Now that we've seen the fundamental counting principle and know how to use it, let's get some more practice. Thanks for watching and I'll see you in the next one.